Friday, 6 September 2013

A nice online piece on Belgian refugees in Kent during the First World War, with the invaluable Women's Library as its source.

"Over a million Belgians fled from the threat of the German armies during
the early days of the war, amounting to almost one-sixth of the
country’s population. Initially, most were received in Holland, France
and Britain. In September 1914 Herbert Samuel, the President of the
Local Government Board, announced to the House of Commons that the
British Government had offered hospitality to the victims of the war and
that arrangements were in place for their transport and accommodation.
The War Refugees Committee, a voluntary body, arranged for them to be
met at ports and stations, found temporary hostels for them and tried
also to secure work for them. The arrival in Britain of some 250,000
Belgian refugees constitutes the largest refugee movement in British
history."
[...]

Thursday, 5 September 2013

On 4 August 1914, Britain declared war on Germany. Germany had invaded
Belgium, a country whose neutrality had been guaranteed by Britain in the 1839
London Treaty. In the following weeks, the German army moved from east to west,
leaving a trail of destruction. Stories of atrocities triggered a mass movement
ahead of the advancing Germans.

About 1.5 million Belgians sought refuge abroad[1]
and mainly went to the Netherlands, but also to France, the United Kingdom, Switzerland,
Spain and across the Atlantic. In Britain, Folkestone bore the full brunt:
after the fall of Antwerp and Ostend (9-15 October), 11,000 Belgians arrived in
the town. By the end of the war, Folkestone was to have accommodated 64,000
Belgians. Most of them were relocated elsewhere in Britain. The vast majority
of Belgian refugees were Flemish, with about 40% coming from the region around
Antwerp alone.

No accurate figures exist as to how many Belgians remained in Britain,
let alone the number of Flemish people. They were very mobile and also
travelled between the various host countries. It is estimated that more than a
quarter of a million Belgians (soldiers included) stayed in Britain during the
First World War, with never more than 175,000 at any given time.[2]

Around 2500 local Belgian refugee committees were formed across the
United Kingdom. They were overseen by a combined effort of the War Refugees
Committee and the Local Government Board. Hundreds of charity initiatives were
organised for the benefit of Belgian refugees (concerts, books, exhibitions…).
They were welcomed as ‘pet Belgians’, everyone wanted one in their house.[3]

However, their presence became a controversial one: villages and towns
all over Britain sent their husbands and sons to the front to join the front in
Flanders and help free the Belgian nation from the Germans, whereas able-bodied
men of that nation and refugees in Britain were not conscripted. The British
government therefore decided to include Belgian refugee men in the war effort
at home.

Eventually, there were over 60,000 Belgians working in Britain during
World War One. More than 500 Belgian companies were established. The largest
was the Pelabon factory in Richmond (the former Ice Rink). In Barrow-in-Furness
nearly 7,000 were employed and in Birtley, Gateshead a true colony emerged close
to the Armstrong-Whitworth munitions factory, Belgian currency included. Factories
were often managed by Walloon engineers, whereas most of the labourers spoke
only Flemish. English had become a kind of relay language.

Across Britain many gratitude plaques still refer to the presence of
Belgian refugees (Ilford, Fulham, Reading, Coventry, Manchester…). From
Elisabeth Avenue in Birtley and Flanders Road in Chiswick to the trees planted
by Belgians in Letchworth and Glasgow, various locations today still refer to
the Belgians. The memorial for Belgian refugees is located at Victoria
Embankment Gardens.

Most of the main and more general archive material about Belgian
refugees in Britain is kept at four locations: the National Archives (Kew), the
Imperial War Museum (London), the National Archives (Brussels) and the archives
of the Archbishop’s Palace (Mechelen). Beyond the British and Belgian newspapers
of the time, other archive material is more scant, and includes anecdotal and
above all scattered pieces of information (not only in Belgium and the UK, but
also in the US).

The first work on the Belgian refugees in English, with a focus on the
reception by the British authorities was produced as a PhD dissertation byPeter Cahalan in 1977. Not much has been published about the refugees
in Britain in Dutch either, but the book Over Het Kanaal / Across The
Channel by Annelies Beck has most certainly sparked widespread interest.

Christophe Declercq, 6 September 2013.

This text was the basis for a brief talk at the
launch of the Flanders House Centenary Series, early May 2013, and was edited lightly.

[1]It is estimated that another 0.5 to 1.5
million Belgians were still on the run but were overtaken by the advancing German
troops. This would total between 2 and 3 million people on the run, or up to 40%
of the population of Belgium.

[2]The most
generous estimate of the number of Belgians in Britain numbers 205,000 refugees
and 40,000 soldiers, with a sensible 10,000 added “for inevitable gaps in the
register” (TTHOTW, vol. IV 1915: 459), loss of data avant la lettre as
it were. By the end of July, there were 172,298 registered Belgian refugees in
Britain (Comité Officiel Belge 1917: 9). However, this does not include
possible duplication. The Glasgow register (goo.gl/MvWqW), for instance, mentions about 10,000 Belgians, whereas in
fact a substantial part of the entries were duplicates.

[3]E.M. Forster took into his home a young
Belgian. Before settling in Hogarth House, Virginia Woolf rented rooms from a
Belgian landlady. Henry James visited wounded Belgians in Chelsea on a daily basis.